Effect of Structure on Charge Distribution in the Isatin Anions in Aprotic Environment: Spectral Study

Effect of Structure on Charge Distribution in the Isatin Anions in Aprotic Environment: Spectral Study

Article Effect of Structure on Charge Distribution in the Isatin Anions in Aprotic Environment: Spectral Study Pavol Tisovský 1,*, Róbert Šandrik 1, Miroslav Horváth 1, Jana Donovalová 1, Juraj Filo 1, Martin Gáplovský 2, Klaudia Jakusová 1, Marek Cigáň 1, Róbert Sokolík 1 and Anton Gáplovský 1 1 Faculty of Natural Sciences, Institute of Chemistry, Comenius University, Ilkovičova 6, Mlynská dolina CH-2, SK-842 15 Bratislava, Slovakia; [email protected] (R.Š.); [email protected] (M.H.); [email protected] (J.D.); fi[email protected] (J.F.); [email protected] (K.J.); [email protected] (M.C.); [email protected] (R.S.); [email protected] (A.G.) 2 Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, Comenius University, Odbojárov 10, SK-832 32 Bratislava, Slovakia; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +421-2-6029-6378 Received: 18 October 2017; Accepted: 9 November 2017; Published: 14 November 2017 Abstract: Five isatin anions were prepared by deprotonation of initial isatins in aprotic solvents using basic fluoride and acetate anions (F− and CH3COO−). The F− basicity is sufficient to deprotonate isatin NH hydrogen from all the studied compounds. This process is reversible. In the presence of proton donor solvents, the anions form the corresponding isatins. The isatin hydrogen acidity depends on the overall structure of the isatin derivatives. The anions were characterized by ultraviolet–visible (UV–Vis), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Interestingly, the anions form aggregates at concentrations above 10−3 mol·dm−3. Further, the effect of cations on the UV–Vis spectra of the studied anions was studied. Charge transfer and its distribution in the anion depends on the radius and the cation electron configuration. The alkali metal cations, tetrabutylammonium (TBA+), Mg2+ and Ag+, interact with the C-2 carbonyl oxygen of the isatin anion. The interaction has a coulombic character. On the other hand, Cd2+, Zn2+, Hg2+, Co2+, and Cu+ cations form a coordinate bond with the isatin nitrogen. Keywords: isatin azanions; azanion aggregation; counterion effect; UV–Vis; FTIR; NMR spectroscopy 1. Introduction Isatin # and its derivatives belong to the most versatile organic compounds, especially in the field of practical applications. Their high application potential is mainly in areas like medicinal chemistry, such as antibiotic, antidepressant, anticancer, anti-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), antimalarial and anti-tuberculosis drugs, and so on [1–7]; pesticides development; analytical reagents and dyes [8,9]; nanotechnologies, particularly the preparation of silver nanoparticles prepared in synergy with isatin derivatives [10,11]; novel heterocyclic compound synthesis and stereoselective processes [12–21]; organic material for electronics [22]; and polymerization [23]. The high application potency of isatin and its derivatives, their occurrence, and their metabolites’ occurrence in plants and in the human body has prompted great interest from chemists, physicians, and pharmacists to study their chemical reactivity. This issue has been, and is still, devoted a great deal of attention, in terms of preparing new derivatives as well as studying the mechanisms of their transformation in plants and in various animal organisms. Due to these facts and also due to the chemical structure itself, increased attention has been paid to the kinetics of isatin hydrolysis, and the respective derivatives [24–32]. From these works follows that the rate of hydrolysis does not show a simple dependence on the environment pH. There are changes in mechanism and the rate-determining step, and the hydrolysis mechanism depends on the Molecules 2017, 22, 1961; doi:10.3390/molecules22111961 www.mdpi.com/journal/molecules Molecules 2017, 22, 1961 2 of 22 environment polarity. The hydrolysis of isatin and its derivatives is a complex process in which, depending on the conditions, several reaction steps or intermediates compete with each other. One of the intermediates predicted by some authors [26] is the conjugated isatin anion (III). The physicochemical anion properties differ from the neutral molecule physicochemical properties. Anions, due to weaker bonded valence electrons, make stronger van der Waals interactions with surrounding molecules than more compact and less polarizable neutral molecules. These interactions can also significantly affect the anion reactivities. The imide and amide anion nucleophilic reactivity was tested by the reaction with various electrophilic substrates [33]. Bunnett and Beale studied the reaction kinetics of several imide and sulfonamide anions with methyl iodide and methyl methanesulfonate in methanol. They reported that the nucleophilic reactivity of these anions correlates with their basicity [34,35]. The ease of anion formation, their stability or reactivity, and likely the biological activity, depend on the anion structure, environment, and so on. Even though the isatin anion or its structural modification may play an important role in the metabolism process of isatin and its derivatives, not enough attention has been paid to the study of their properties so far. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and Raman spectra of the isatin anion itself were published by Binev et al. [36]. The photophysics of the isatin anion were described in the work of Berci-Filho et al. [37]. As mentioned above, isatin has high application potential in various areas of industry. An isatin structural fragment is often a part of functional materials. The isatin structure is found in several compounds whose properties have been designed in the area of chemical anion sensors [38,39], or materials usable in electronics [40]. For this area of functional material applications, we have recently used the isatin fragment as the carrier structure in the development of anion sensors, or signal switches. The isatin fragment, depending on the overall structure of the molecule, can enter into tautomeric equilibria that affect the entire molecule functionality. When designing structures of such functional materials, it is necessary to know the spectral, physical, photophysical, and chemical properties of the molecules with the isatin structure as well as their azanions. Therefore, in this work, we have focused on the preparation and spectral properties study (ultraviolet–visible (UV–Vis), FTIR, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) of isatin azanions depending on their structure. Organic anions can be generated in various ways. For compounds that have acidic hydrogen in their molecule, the following reaction is often used to generate anions: X− + H–Y ↔ H–X + Y−. (1) The H–Y strong acid anion can be prepared by reaction with an anion X− and a weaker H–X acid. If the anion X-basicity is insufficient to deprotonate the HY receptor, a hydrogen bond is formed between HY and X: X + H–Y ↔ Y–HX− (2) There are many anion examples—F−, AcO− and so on—which interact with the acidic hydrogen of an urea fragment, or with the hydrogen of N,N′-bis(diphenyl)urea derivatives and the NH hydrogen of acidic benzimidazoles, pyrroles, and indoles to form the corresponding anions [41–51]. In this work we used the following isatins (Scheme 1) to prepare their azanions and to study the effect of their structure on spectral properties (UV–Vis, FTIR and NMR). Scheme 1. Molecular structures of studied isatin derivatives A–E. Isatin D is a new compound, and so far, it has not yet been described in literature. Molecules 2017, 22, 1961 3 of 22 2. Results and Discussion 2.1. Ultraviolet–Visible Spectra of the Compounds A–E and Their Azanions The UV–Vis spectra of A–E and the spectra of their corresponding azanions are shown in Figure 1a,b. Absorption maxima in the region 260 nm to 350 nm correspond to the π→π* transition of the aromatic part of the structure A–E [52]. A relatively weak absorption band ranging from 350 nm to 600 nm is linked with the nitrogen and oxygen free electron pairs and can be assigned to n→π* and intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) transition. The charge distribution in the molecule can be described by the resonance structure that is characteristic for amides or lactams (Scheme 2). The nitrogen free electron pair delocalization supports the formation of a partial double bond between nitrogen and the isatin C-2 position (structure II, Scheme 2). Scheme 2. The charge distribution in the studied molecules. Any change that directly affects the electron density on the nitrogen atom will also affect the physicochemical properties of the studied compounds. The absorption maxima position as well as the band intensity from 260 to 350 nm therefore depends on the structure or the donor–acceptor ability of the studied isatin aromatic systems. The structural comparison of A, C and E shows that the position of these bands shifts bathochromically with increasing donor ability of the A, C and E aromatic system (Figure 1a). Similarly, the intensity of these absorption bands is proportional to the donor strength of the aromatic system of the isatins. Molecules 2017, 22, 1961 4 of 22 Figure 1. (a) Ultraviolet–visible (UV–Vis) spectra A–E (1 × 10−4 mol·dm−3) and (b) corresponding azanions in the presence of tetrabutylammonium fluoride (TBAF) in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) (1 × 10−2 mol·dm−3). Such dependence of the absorption intensity on the isatin aromatic system donor strength was not observed for the long-wavelength absorption in the 350 nm to 600 nm region. The π→π* and n→π* dependence on the donor strength of the A–E aromatic system indicates that the interaction of the aromatic ring and the isatin five-membered ring cannot be described by a one-parameter function, but it is, rather, a complex process [53]. Erich Kleinpeter et al. [54] showed that through space nuclear magnetic resonance shieldings (TSNMRS) can be successfully used to quantify and visualize (anti-)aromaticity and to easily identify the zwitterionic structure in push–pull systems.

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